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Thread: Low HS Grad Rates in US Cities

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    Default Low HS Grad Rates in US Cities

    This should concern us all:

    Report: Low grad rates in US cities By KEN THOMAS, Associated Press Writer
    Tue Apr 1, 6:29 AM ET



    Seventeen of the nation's 50 largest cities had high school graduation rates lower than 50 percent, with the lowest graduation rates reported in Detroit, Indianapolis and Cleveland, according to a report released Tuesday.

    The report, issued by America's Promise Alliance, found that about half of the students served by public school systems in the nation's largest cities receive diplomas. Students in suburban and rural public high schools were more likely to graduate than their counterparts in urban public high schools, the researchers said.

    Nationally, about 70 percent of U.S. students graduate on time with a regular diploma and about 1.2 million students drop out annually.

    "When more than 1 million students a year drop out of high school, it's more than a problem, it's a catastrophe," said former Secretary of State Colin Powell, founding chair of the alliance.

    His wife, Alma Powell, the chair of the alliance, said students need to graduate with skills that will help them in higher education and beyond. "We must invest in the whole child, and that means finding solutions that involve the family, the school and the community." The Powell's organization was beginning a national campaign to cut high school dropout rates.

    The group, joining Education Secretary Margaret Spellings at a Tuesday news conference, was announcing plans to hold summits in every state during the next two years on ways to better prepare students for college and the work force.

    The report found troubling data on the prospects of urban public high school students getting to college. In Detroit's public schools, 24.9 percent of the students graduated from high school, while 30.5 percent graduated in Indianapolis Public Schools and 34.1 percent received diplomas in the Cleveland Municipal City School District.

    Researchers analyzed school district data from 2003-2004 collected by the U.S. Department of Education. To calculate graduation rates, the report estimated the likelihood that a 9th grader would complete high school on time with a regular diploma. Researchers used school enrollment and diploma data, but did not use data on dropouts as part of its calculation.

    Many metropolitan areas also showed a considerable gap in the graduation rates between their inner-city schools and the surrounding suburbs. Researchers found, for example, that 81.5 percent of the public school students in Baltimore's suburbs graduate, compared with 34.6 percent in the city schools.

    In Ohio, nearly 83 percent of public high school students in suburban Columbus graduate while 78.1 percent in suburban Cleveland earn their diplomas, well above their local city schools.

    Ohio Department of Education spokesman Scott Blake said the state delays its estimates by a few months so it can include summer graduates in its calculations. Based on the state's methodology, he said Columbus graduated 60.6 percent of its students in 2003-2004, rather than the 40.9 percent the study calculated.

    By Ohio's reckoning, Columbus has improved each year since the 2001-2002 school year, with 72.9 percent of students graduating in 2005-2006, Columbus Public Schools spokesman Jeff Warner said.

    Warner said the gains were partly because of after-school and weekend tutoring, coordinated literacy programs in the district's elementary schools and bolstered English-as-a-second-language programs.

    Cleveland's current graduation rates are also higher than the statistics cited in the new report, school district spokesman Ben Holbert said.

    Spellings has called for requiring states to provide graduation data in a more uniform way under the renewal of the No Child Left Behind education law pending in Congress.

    Under the 2002 law, schools that miss progress goals face increasing sanctions, including forced use of federal money for private tutoring, easing student transfers, and restructuring of school staff.

    States calculate their graduation rates using all sorts of methods, many of which critics say are based on unreliable information about school dropouts. Under No Child Left Behind, states may use their own methods of calculating graduation rates and set their own goals for improving them.

    The research was conducted by Editorial Projects in Education, a Bethesda, Md., nonprofit organization, with support from America's Promise Alliance and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    The alliance is based on a joint effort of nonprofit groups, corporations, community leaders, charities, faith-based organizations and individuals to improve children's lives.

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    I don't really lay the problem on the schools, but on our society.

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    Quote Originally Posted by uscitizen View Post
    I don't really lay the problem on the schools, but on our society.
    What's different about society today than 40 years that you blame?

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    Quote Originally Posted by uscitizen View Post
    I don't really lay the problem on the schools, but on our society.
    Oh, absolutely. I was stunned to learn, a few years ago, that some (perhaps many?) inner city schools don't even have proper textbooks. How can kids learn without books? Also, if kids come from a background that doesn't value education because the family or neighborhood doesn't believe that an education will be of any help in furthering the child's prospects in life, then there won't be any encouragement to learn, either. It's a lot more complex than this but recognizing the problem empirically might be a good first step.
    My goal in life is to be as good a person as my dog thinks I am.

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    Quote Originally Posted by cawacko View Post
    What's different about society today than 40 years that you blame?
    No values passed on to kids. Too little parenting, etc. so what if the school is not the best in the country, get your degree and do the best you can. Remember I grew in in Applachia back before Johnson fixed it
    Also my father died at the beginning of my SR year, money was very tight, etc. Plenty of excuses to drop out, but I did not. I worked 40 hrs a week in addition to going to HS.

    And contrary to spinners lies I do have a HS diploma, not a GED.

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    just getting under your skin uswarhero!!!

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    You try....

    Just another lie, I am not a war hero.
    I was a war victim.
    Keep trying.

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